BLADE—Slow to anger, fast with a gun and no slouch with women. A man tempered by the West, dangerous living and a perpetual gamble with death. THE WOMEN—the Indian girl: lovely waif of a grisly massacre. The Mexican girl: mettlesome as a thoroughbred filly; heiress to half New Mexico. THE KILLERS—blind to mercy, indifferent to death, scourge of the West. From the author of the STORM Family saga

Like the man the mob was trying the lynch, the Ysabel Kid was half Comanche. He was a crack shot with a Colt Dragoon, a master of the border country art of "cut-and-slash," and the fastest shot with a Winchester Yellow Boy repeater Texas had ever seen. Of course the mob didn't know that. All they say was a baby-faced kid in black who needed to be taught a lesson...

Clay Morrow was bored. His rebellious instincts compelled him to ride out and soon his trail crossed that of the desperate men who conspired to attack and loot an army supply wagon. In the moment of crisis, the adventurer was thrown together with a veteran manhunter, the astute, courageous Jim Rand, and that bucktoothed bravado from south of the border, Benito Espina.

The town of Fortuna offered no warm welcome to the Lone Star Hellions and three desperate men and four frightened women left to die in the arid heart of the Big Amarillo. Also in need of shelter were the infamous Cleave Elrigg and his cohorts—escapees from the Pima Valley Prison, all determined never to be recaptured. The climax, an explosion of violence and mayhem, echoed to every corner of town.

Lefty McNally and the Kiowa Kid were life-long friends, who did everything together. That included their latest adventure when hired to bring in the Milo Paxton Gang who'd be robbing the Northwest & Canadian Railroad. Going after the gang put them on the trail of lost treasure and a six-gun war that’d leave gunsmoke and splattered blood from Kansas to Colorado!

The battle of Moon Mountain might have been the Texans’ last fight. Their luck had run out, but they were still defiant, as tough as ever, and a force to be reckoned with. The West’s rowdiest trouble-shooters are up to their Texas ears in violence, intrigue and sudden death. Once again, the fists fly and the guns roar; the lawless get more than they bargained for, in a hectic fight to the finish.

When cattle baron Philip Olsen decided he wanted Jim Talman's range, he didn't expect too much resistance. Olsen soon found he was up against a man who had no intention of quitting. No matter what was thrown in Jim’s path he worked around it, took his licks, and despite being bruised and battered, he stood firm, willing to go all the way in order to survive Talman’s War!

At the request of a beautiful widow, Clint Adams is taking her dead husband for his last ride to West Texas. From St. Louis to the burial site, they run into a lot of mysterious people who know more about their journey than Clint does. Rachel has a story to tell, but her lips are as tight as a coffin lid. Is Rachel as helpless as she seems? He just hopes it's not his own last ride.

An Apache warhorse gone wild, he was the magnificent prize in a fierce mustanger range war on the west Texas plains. On one side was a small army of hired killers armed to the teeth. On the other side was a proud Scot and his Texas woman, backed up by three cowhands from the Floating Outfit: Mark Counter, the Ysabel Kid and Dusty Fog. Just about an even match!

Driving three thousand head of Cassandra Whiteside’s cattle into a town called Sundust, John Stone expected the usual gunplay with rustlers and bandits. But this time Stone collects double rations of deep trouble—Two long-riding gunslingers, driven by a burning hatred of John Stone, share a single ambition; to bury Stone beneath the dry sod of Sundust - or die trying...